Well-Delivered: 5 FindLaw Newsletters You Can Use

By Neetal Parekh on February 4, 2010 6:10 AM

Whether by FedEx, UPS, or Pizza Hut...it's all about the delivery. And
FindLaw gets it.

The site that brings up-to-date legal news, case summaries, and blogs also
delivers newsletters. Right to your inbox. There are FindLaw newsletters with
recent circuit court cases, weekly roundups of cases by subject area, top legal
headlines, sports news, human resources headlines, and business news and law to
name a few.

With nearly 100 FindLaw newsletters to
choose from, how does a billing-duressed associate or studying-fatigued student
decide? We asked the FindLaw Newsletter team to pick their top choices of
newsletters that would be useful to law associates and law students. And before
you resort to unsavory take-out legal news again, consider your options in fresh
delivery...

1. Cool Jobs newsletter. Whether you love your
job or are looking...this weekly newsletter will let you keep a finger on the
pulse of legal jobs around the U.S.

2. Supreme Court case summaries newsletter.
Fancy yourself to be a SCOTUS buff? Well fancy getting summaries of cases from
the top court cued to the top of your inbox. It could give you a gavel up on
fellow associates or your fellow L's.

3. Top Legal Headlines newsletter. Want
to reign over the water cooler talk circuit? Sign up for your daily dose of
legal news speak from around the country. And it's even-iPhone and Blackberry
friendly.

4. Legal Topic
newsletters. (i.e. Entertainment, Labor & Employment,
Cyberspace Law, Corporate/Business Law, Small Firm/Solo Practice News, Sports
Law, Environmental Law): Special people specialize. And if you're a
special attorney or J.D.-trainee, you can stay current in your field through
subscribing to a corresponding legal topic newsletter.

5. Legal Grounds newsletter. Because even the
law doesn't take itself seriously all the time. FindLaw's Legal Grounds
newsletter lets you laugh at--er, with--the law and its oddities.

Have a question or two? You can visit the FindLaw's Newsletter FAQ to get the lowdown on FindLaw
newsetters and how to sign up.